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Graphics quality in PC games continues to move upward.

These days, there is a lot of talk about virtual reality headsets and the impact that these will have on the performance requirements of gaming-focused computers. Indeed, graphics specialist NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) claims that playing games in VR requires seven times the performance that playing a game on a typical computer monitor does.

Image source: Polygon.

Although this slide makes it seem as though VR is going to be a major driver of graphics performance requirements, I believe that even if VR never goes mainstream, the natural increase in traditional PC monitor display resolutions and refresh rates will have the same effect.

Reworking NVIDIA's mathFirst of all, I don't know of any gamer that would consider 30 frames per second an acceptable target frame rate. For the non-gamers reading this, the user experience at 30 frames per second -- particularly in fast-action games -- is suboptimal.

Indeed, I strongly believe that 60 frames per second should be the minimum gamers hope to run games at. By sampling moving the goalposts from 1920x1080 resolution at 30 frames per second to 1920x1080 resolution at 60 frames per second, VR becomes just 3.5 times more demanding than a typical gaming experience.

That said, given that VR is likely to be a kind of niche, high-end solution, I don't think comparing the requirements of a PC running a commodity 1920x1080, 60 Hertz (i.e., 60 frames per second) monitor is at all fair.

A fairer comparison in my mind would be high-end gaming-oriented monitors against the expensive-and-niche VR headset.

Higher resolutions and refresh rates really drive up performance requirementsThese days, if you want to buy a truly high-end gaming monitor, you have two choices:

One with a display resolution of 2560x1440 with a 144Hz refresh rate; or

One with a display resolution of 3840x2160 with a 60Hz refresh rate

In the case of the first, the increased resolution means 1.78 times the number of pixels to push. The 144 Hz refresh rate means that the frames need to be drawn at a rate 4.8 times that of the monitor described by NVIDIA. Combining those gives around 8.54 times the graphical horsepower required relative to the 1920x1080, 30 frames per second target given.

Doing this calculation with the 4K monitor given above yields a full four times the number of pixels at twice the frame rate, or about eight times the requirements of the baseline configuration that NVIDIA gave.

The above calculations show that the kind of resolutions and frame rates that higher-end gaming PCs need to drive are already at least as demanding as those required by upcoming VR headsets, if not more so.

As resolutions and monitor refresh rates increase (I wouldn't be surprised to see 4K monitors at 120 Hz-and-up refresh rates arrive within the next year or so), those demands will only go up.

Higher resolutions and frame rates should become more affordable on the PCAccording to the Steam Hardware Survey, 1920x1080 is by far the most popular resolution, with 1366x768 the second most popular. Indeed, only a small fraction of Steam users (which I believe to be a good proxy for the PC gaming population) run games at higher resolutions.

That said, as prices for higher resolution/higher frame rate monitors come down, I believe that adoption of such monitors will increase, leading to an easy increase in how demanding games are to run at the native resolutions of gamers' monitors.

It's not all about resolutionAlthough an increase in the average display resolution among gamers should help drive up graphical requirements, it's also important to note that games themselves continue to become intrinsically more demanding.

Objects with higher polygon counts, more sophisticated lighting and shadowing techniques, and other cool visual effects all lead to increases in hardware requirements.

These resolution-independent quality enhancements, coupled with the resolution increases, are certainly part of why I'm positive on NVIDIA's graphics business irrespective of the success (or lack thereof) of VR headsets.

Author

Ashraf Eassa is a Senior Technology Specialist with The Motley Fool. He's a passionate and experienced technology stock analyst and investor with a focus semiconductors. He holds B.S. degrees in Mathematics and Computer Science from the University of Vermont. You can write to him at aeassa@gmail.com.